Maxims of s - More Men early bird gets The worth. '14 PAGE I-lls Eminence James Ca bishop of Toronto, Ont., and University exchanging reminiscences with the Pro-Chancel- lor, Most Reverend G. J. MacLeilan, P.A., Exchange ilesilal, thd rdinal MacGuigan, D.D., Arch- a graduate of St. Dunstanls prior to the Alumni banquet in the auditorium of the University last evening. -Barter's Film Lab. TRAFFIC. RECOMMENDATIONS, MADE BY CDRONER' S JURY AT INOUEST A strong recommendation that- all vehicles unprovidad with a seat. for passengers should not be per- mitted to carry any passengers was made last night by s coroner's Jury lnauiring into the death last. set- ur ay bf -ll-VII!-old Albert Wood- lngton. The boy was accidentally killed while riding on the running board of a delivery truck when it side- iwiped an electric light pole at the rm-her of Edward and Euston Coming Events "Dance in Millview Hall, every Friday. ' "Dance Hall. "Dance, Iona West school every Friday. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Regular Dance. Howe's 1-Iall. tonight. Music by Doiron Bios. "Dance, Little Pond Hall every Monday. Chaisson's Orchestra. "Dance Elliott Hall. Friday night. Toole Orchestra. "Dance' in Belfast Hall Satur- day, August 7. Dancing from 8 p.m. to 11.46 p.m. "Dance Cardigan hall. Monday August 9. Turner's Orchestra. Ausplcsa C.Y.C. "For Custom Combining. Grain list your name now. 1:. J. Mac- Dougall. Vernon. "Ice Cream Festival. Sprlngneid Hall. Friday, August em. Spon- sored by W. A. tonight, Oorran nan "Dance at Mt. Ryan Hall at Johnston's River every Friday. Burke's orchestra. "In stbck, Dithaae, and all kinds potato sprays. fly sprays and binder twine. Dillon as splliett. "ice cream social. Friday. Aug- ust 20. Hold on property adjoin- lnl Poole'a store. "There's an Ice Cream Festival streets. After their finding as above regarding the death, the jury last night further recommen- ded that owners of vehicles used for,distributing their products in- struc their drivers regarding re- gulst as about parking on the wrong side of the road. AThe inquest. adjourned from last Saturday, was held by Coroner Dr. L. E. Prowse at City Hall with Mr. John Nicholson representing the Crown and with Chief of Police Charles MacArthur present. The accident occurred when the boy was helping the driver of the truck deliver bread to retail stores. They had just made a delivery and had only a short run to the next store. (Continued on page 13, col. 7) Wilbert Coffin is Murder. Sentenced By TOM McCUSK1i:R. Canadian Press staff Writer panes, Que” (OP)-Burly Wil- bert Coffin Thursday was found guilty of the murder of a youth- ful American bear hunter and was sentenced to be hanged Nov. 26. The jury of six English-speaking and six French-speaking talesmen deliberated only 34 minutes before returning their verdict against the 43-year-old mospector and handy- man.- Ooifin paled as the verdict was announced. He stared fixedly at Mr. Justice Gerard Lacrolx. the presiding judge, and appelred Ml to hear the court clerk ask him if he had anything to say. when he failed to reply, Mr Justice Lacroix donned the tradi- tional black gloves and sentenced him to be hanged. Coffin stood at attention, manacicd to two police constables. BEARS GNAWED BODIES coffin was convicted of the mur- der of Richard Lindsey, 17, of -Holidaysburg, Pa.. in the Gaapo bush. The bear-gnawed body of the younger Lindsey was found at Brackley school, Friday, August tlth. Bring your friends. It's a Women's Institute affair. "Unloading car bulk wheat and barley miatun, Friday and Satur- lllv. R. I... Dlckieson. New Glas- sow. "Another good Western lhow to Motlll tonight and to- hlgltt; It's "The 'NI.lIheet Arisona.'.' . 1 0 narrow inn is "ltop at the Woodshed Restaur- lllia liunur River-Gateway to Gov- rndielt. Bill .eourse meals. Closed Sunday's only. "See and hear the Four Knights It the ltoilswey Club Tuesday night. Aug. 10th at am Mn. Admission 31.00. Following the Nrforniance there will "wins from me run. until 215 km. Admission 81. . ' "Chewing at Mt. Stewart Hiday second handed down in the tiny along with those of his father, Eugene, 47, and Albert Claar, 20, in July, 1053. In the back row of the court- room. attractive Mrs. Rhoda stan- ley. II. Coifin's.siatm'. bvlln '-0 weep when the verdict was an- nounced. Beside her. Marion Pet- rie, 0offln's co -law wife, sobbed into her handkerchief. Both had been crown witnesses during the trial. Albert come. the l1rosnoctor's father, would not enter the court- room. Boineone came out and told him the verdict. He turned and walked directly to his car. obliv- ious of the tnlckipyer of mud cov- ering the soggy courthouse lawn. There, he sat alone. om: 3 IN lee uses The murder conviction was the eourtiooia of this picturesque tour- ist town within a month. but only GM as ay "Mluinippi Gambler". third in more than 100 years. V V 3,... .h"h' "mg to the conviction of 17- , pug; gnu. ygg. Mung. year-old Venant clavet July is for an mm -n-mm. any the axe-murder of Jean-Paul Pel- lgoigm A. picture statues out -I tome; ::'g'f'.,l;g ' sync, Deed, Charles Men I011 ll ' " .-I '- . DD. I-"II KIN?! St. Dunstan's College brought its monumental reunion and centenary celebration to a happy conclusion last night with one of the largest banquets Prince Edward Island has ever seen. More than 700 graduates and their wives or husbands filled two huge rooms to eat a. turkey dinner and than converged on one of them, the gymnasiump to hear the final speeches in tribute to their alma mater. The banquet was sponsored by the college alumni association. The main address of the evening W85 Riven by Very Rev. Gavan P. Monaghan, Superintendent of Cath- olic Schools for the United States Diocese of Oklahoma and one of six Charlottetown brothers who entered the priesthood. He said his years away from st. Dunstan's-he left its staff in 1941 -wll3Vt3 Riven him a chance to meet men educated in other atmospheres ml?" the religious type which pre- vails here. These contacts had only deepened his gratitude for the re- ceived at St. Dunstan's. , For men without that were apt to be men without the spiritual foundations and yardstick; without to go by. They were apt to degree of aceptance by a majority rostprandfal speeches Mr. Justice Mark Macoulgan, alumni president. Toasts were pro- posed 10 the Queen. the Church, to 05111115. to the Gollegc and to the Alumni Association and were re- lmmlgrotion ' Olson T- healthy stata of Australia's eco- nomy has produced an increased demand for industrial workers and caused the government to raise its immigration quota for the coming yenr by 7.000 man. immigration minister Harold Holt announced Thursday. The special quota for extra in- dustrial workers is in addition to the planned lrnmigration figure of 100,000, he said. Found Guilty To Hang Nov. 26 ion says the rains came sitar the hanging. ruining crops and conun- ing fishermen to port. it rained when Olavet was sen- tenced and it rained steadily all day Thursday. some 80 witnesses appeared for the crown. In a surprise move, the defence called no one but argued that the crown had failedtn prove conclusively that Coffin was the murderer. The American hunters headed into the Clasps bush in Junie, lees. Coffin said he met them June 10. while on a prospecting trip. HELPED PIX TRUCK! He said their truck had broken down and he went with the young- est member of the party to get a new fuel pump. According to Cof- fin's testln1ony.he left them short- ly after returning with the pump and collecting 340 for his services Coffin as one of the searchers. , In July, the bodies of the hunt- ers were found. badly mutilated by the bears they had gone to hunt. ligious type of education he had re- which education was meaningless. They had no eternal measurements fudge the virtue of a thing simply by 1:; The chairman of the evening was Wlltll "19 hunt”! filled '0 before the endloi the current sca- come out of the bush, relatives in 510,, or commsag Hoiidaysburg alerted police in The lenatol-5: mm" Johnson Oaspe A mull VII INN. With (Dem. Colo.): John c. Stenhis CENTENNIAL REUNION CONCLUDES WITH LARGELY ATTENDED BANQUET plied to by Charles A. Tingley of Campbeilton, N. 3., Most Rev. G. J. MecLellan, Pro-Chancellor, Lt.-Col. Leo F. MacDonald of Charlottetown, Jean-Louis Levesque of Montreal. Louis Mailette of saint John, N. 8., Dr. James MacDougall. Rumford. Me., Rev. R. G. Ellsworth oi the College. and Frank MecPhee of Charlottetown. There were, in addition, tributes paid to all lthose who had labored to eke the three days of cele- bra ion a success. notably Father Edmund Roche, secretary-treasurer of the Alumni Association, for to him, said Mr. Justice Mnccuigan, "belongs 90 per cent of the credit." Father Roche in turn thanked all those who had participated. M. A. Farmer of Charlottetown, as chair- man of the resolutions committee, presented resolutions extending gratitude for those who had help. e . In the past few days distinguish- ed visitors and sons of the college alike have united in praising St. Dunstan's, not only for her achieve- ments but for the intangible things she'd given her students. Last night it was a family -affair and the speaking of praise was the speaking of the heart. The whole final day. in fact, was an internal occasion, a. family af- fair. In the morning, for instance, (Continued on page 13, col. in Canada's fish Calch Shows A 23 PC. Increase nearly 23 per cent more than the 525.2d3,000 pounds in the first half of last year. The bumper catch. which topped the 1002 half-year landings by more than five per cent and the 1951 half-year take by over 21 per cent, was worth 328,367,000 to the fish- ermen, the bureau of statistics re- ported Thursday. This was 4.5 per cent more than last year's landed value of 527,144,000. East coast landings in the first six months increased only slightly to 468,470,000 pounds from 465,793,- 000, but the landed value rose 1.2 per cent to 822,131,000 from s21.- s58,000, larger catches of ground- fish more than offsetting a price cut which lowered the total value Newfoundland, Nova Scams and Prince Edward Island. but lower in New Brunswick and Quebec. On the west coast the lialf-year yield was almost three times as' great this year, increasing to 176,-! 846,000 pounds from 59,470,000, and the landed value advanced in per cent to 50,226,000 from 55,285,000. Numfcommissi-on For Mccarfliy Probe WASHINGTON, (AP) - Vice- President Richard Nixon has ap- pointed a six-member Senate com- mines to make an investigation of senator Joseph McCarthy (Rep. wls.) and consider proposals that he be censured. The commit is made up of three Republicans and three Demo- crats. Nixon will sit in on its dc-lib-A erationa. its job is to bring in a report (Dem. Mias.); Sam J. Ervin (Dem. N.C.): Arthur Watkins (Rep. Utah): Frank Carlson (Rep. Kans I; Eran-' cis case (Rep. s.D.). T Founded 18 i WN, CANADA. FRIDAY. AUGUST 0. 1064 PEIGN, Il1., ( to snuff out a two-day w Six bodies have been rec ions in stored alcohol. The chain of fires and explosions on the 61-acre grounds of the Am- erican Distllling Company injured 83 persons and destroyed four buildings. Estimates of the whisky loss ranged from 90,000 to 110,000 barrels-the equivalent of between 14,175,000 and 17,325,000 fifths o liquor. SEARCH FOR BODIES As the heat eased off. workers moved in with bulldozers and a scoop shovel to search for bodies in the scattered rubble. The dead were Lawrence Neav- ear, 39; .Marion S. Gerber, 53; William Kohler, 35; James Dancey, 40; construction and engineering superintendent, Richard Eartmoed. 32, and Edward Winkler, 47. All were distillery employees. The buildings-three large rack- houses, where whisky' is aged in barrels, and is storage house-were transformed into heaps of lava-hot rubble. Each of these heaps resembled a huge kerosene lantern. Above each rose a tongue of flame about 15 feet high. There was no smoke. It was an eerie spectacle. NEW EXPLOSIONS FEAR. The heat from the burning build- ings-rather than the flames-kept alive the danger of new explosions in stored liquor in buildings which had not been touched by the fire. The series of fires began about 2 a.m. Wednesday, when lightning ll struck a rackhouse. The flames spread to another rackhouse and a custom storage house. An explosion Wednesday night turned another rackhouse into a geyser of flames, bricks, timbers and embers. The dead were re- covered from its rubble. Cnska of whisky broke. The alco- - ,,.,,-T ,,--OTTAW ., OI) 0 dian fish- hot aoaltedinto the debris and the Up In Australia 7" ermen 'e4lmsig'r5.1-Tpeuoaa --1i'r'grorms.- Each. mump- fish from the Atlantic and Pacific wick. CANBERRA. (Reuters) - The in the first six months this year. "Nothing burns hotter than alco- hol." said Joseph I-laesleln, gen- eral manager of the plant. "The heat radiating from the fire has us worried over what may happen first Iron Ore - From New Mine Al Philadelphia P1-IILADEIJPHIA (AP)-The S8 Hawaiian, bearing 20,000 tons of high grade iron ore, greeted by whistling tugs and steamers, docked here Thursday with the At that time a sailor was hang- of the lobster catch. The half-year first cargo from the new Quebec- ed for murder: A local suparstit- catch was higher than last year in Labrador mining development. Business and government lead- ers were on hand as the ship made its way up the Delaware river es- corted by a fleet of tugs and water- spraying fire-boats. Welcoming the shipment, Gover- nor John S. Pine of Pennsylvania called the ore a "new weapon in the armament of freedom." workmen began unloading the vessel at a new 310,000,000 pier constructed at Greenwich point by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The celebration also served at the pier's dedication. Philadelphia Mayor Joseph S. Clark, Jr., calling the shipment "ii source of strength to the free world," said arrival of the Cana- dian ore "marks the turning point which will make Philadelphia again the largest port in tonnage o imports in the United states." The ore will be distributed by rail to five steel companies. Na- tional, Republic, Wheeling, Armco and Youngstown sheet and tube. These concerns own the Iron Ore Co. of Canada, developers of the four-year-old Canadian mining pro- ject. along with the Hollister Gold Mines Limited. Canada. and the M. A. Hanna Co. of Cleveland. '(By Roger Inns) T AP)-Firemen strove Thursday nl ht ' frii,-Ea Six TDeal:I1s,i Millions lrfbaaia In Whiskey-Fed Disi:lTTeI'YFire Vcsveiil Edward I H Lilia. me new . PIIOBIIV hisky-fed distillery fire t at caused six deaths and millions of dollars in losses. overed in the debris. Legion Told Musi Help Poorer Veterans In Other Parts Of Commonwealth The intense heat forced firemen to fight at long range most of the day and threatened to touch off fresh explos- next.” at a squat sheetmetal from flaming rackhouse 3. Exports Slip To Three-Year l.ow ports fell by down in all major markets. the United States. The most concern was directed structure where 300,000 gallons of alcohol are stored. It is about 70 feet away OTTAWA (CPl - Canada's ex- sl44,000,000 in the first half of 1954 to a ,three-year low of sl,ll75,'l00,00D. Sales were imports slipped by 3l05,000,000 to 33,05l,600,000, with the major drop showing in purchases from This drop in both exports and imports narrowed Canada's for- By ALAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP)-The Canadian Legion was told Thursday it must come to the help of fellow veterans in "poorer parts of the British Com- monwealth and Empire. The statement was made to the legion convention here by E. H. C. Leather, a Conservative member of the British House of Commons and the legion's representative on the Empire council of the British Empire Service League. "The political consequences of our action or inaction at this crit- ical stsge in the world's affairs can be enormous," said Mr. Leather, a native of Hamilton. The plan for financial help to veterans in poorer parts of the Empire had been suggested by the Canadian Legion to the parent BESL. "There are many parts of the world inhabited by our ex-com- rsdes where living standards are pitiful compared to ours; where education standards are only be- eign trade deficit to sl'I5,000,000 from the sl90,i)00,000 experienced in the first half oi.last year, the ginning to be set up; where polit- ical stability is a young and tender Legion would take the lead in the assistance program. Canadians did not fully realize the regard which foreign countries held for Canada and its national leaders. CHOOSE OFFICERS in elections for posts on the legion Dominion command, dele- gates chose George Gleave of Ed- monlnn as first vice-president: H. W, Sutherland of Campbellton, M('Tavish of Salmon Arm, B.C., N.B., second vice president; Don third vice-president; and Alan Mac- donald -of Edmonton, vice-chain man. The new president for the next two years, Very Rev. J. 0. Ander- son, Anglican dean of Otawa, suc- ceeding Dr. C. B. Lumsden of Wolf- ville, N.S., was unopposed in the nominations earlier this week. in one of the more contentious resolutions, delegates decided that branches should be instructed to keep a religious content in their Nov. 11 Remembrance Day serv- ices. The proposal was submitted by a Montreal branch. where a prayer bureau of statistics on foreign trade. estimated Thursday in a preliminary report Lower wheat sales accounted for growth, and where Communist ac- tion and propaganda present a far greater threat to the free world than they could ever do in Canada proposed for last year's service was dropped when defence head- quarters said the armed forces would not be permitted to attend much of the decline in exports. Shipments dropped by Si05,000.000 to sitltl.463,000 from S2'Il,5i29.000 in the first half of 1053. Exports to the U.S. declined to 31,l33,80fl,000 from 81.200.000.000 last year. while those to Britain fell to 3290,700,000 from 0315.800,- 000. Yangtze River , V Reported In Flood LONDON, (AP)-Swirling flood waters in the Yangtze reached GB feet Thursday, Peiplrig radio re- ported, a foot higher than when the river burst its banks in 1931. The broadcast gave no indication that the flood. one of the worst in China's history. is abeting. CHILD BUENED ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-A two- yegrugld girl from Port Saunders, on Newfoundland: west coast, has died in a fire which destroyed the family home. A report received by RCMP headquarters here Thurs- day said Patricia Levers burned to death Tuesday when fire levelled a house owned by her father. Isidore l Levers. Lucien Picard Arraigned For Gniesome Murder Of Six-year-old Montreal Boy MONTREAL, (OP)-Lucien Pic- ard. four-foot. ll-inch unemPl0Y- ed machinist, has been charged with one of the most. gruesome murders in Montreal police annals. The 120-pound suspect was ar- raigned Thursday for the slaying of six-year-old Raymond Trudeau I short time after a six-man cor- oner's jury found him criminally responsible for the boy's macabre death, The jury delivered its ver- dict only three minutes after the conclusion of testimony. Preliminary hearing Aug. 12. Provincial medico-legal expert Dr. Rosario Fontalne drew shocked exclamations from the crowded coroner's court when he testified that the boy may have still been alive when his head was severed from his body. Dr. Fontaine said, however. he believed the death was caused by strangulation. The body of the youngster, who celebrated his sixth birthday the day before his disappearance eight days ago, was chopped into a num- ber of parts "a.pparentiy...to pre- vent identiflcation," said Dr. Fon- talne. The boy's head, hands and legs was set for By DON IOIWIND '1'lI!!F-AN. Iran (AP)-The bitter British-Itanisn oil dispute has been settled. more than three years after Mohammad Moseadegh nationalised the Iranian oil indus- try. on is expected to flow again to western markets from this little nation bordering loviet Russia within two to four months - The British government called the agreement "a major contribu- tion to the stability of the whole viir 2:: -"-.........-" . I Dulles de- clared "every tn&ar at the com- munity of free asiieas stands to gain" from the settlement between sight In western ell eoaipanin and the Iranian gnustanent. western siplsnah predicted the Iranian accord-together with the recent aeltish-lsyptlan agreement on the Sues canal zone-will pave the way ior'a new Middle East de- fence network. Representatives of the Anglo- Iranian Oil Company, which had lost installations built up ow-r a half century before the nationall- aation program. five American companies and Dutch and french firms reached a 15-year agreement with Iran for operation of the in- dustry, which has turned out only a trickle of oil since Mossadegh took over the fields in 1051. scans on nice The A100. controlled by the Bri- Ilsbwvsrnaient. agreed to accept 070. .000 and "a 40 per cent. in- tense in the new oil combine for its vast itlsa, once valued llnmtlhlll at more than a billion dollars. Western oilmen and finance min- ister All Amnlni initialled the com- pensation agreement in Tehran. It provides for payments beginning Jan. 1. 1057, running 10 years with- out interest. The company origin- ally demanded a half billion dol- lars compensation. The announcement of the over- all settienisnt came in a joint ntatsmsnt here by Finance Min- ister Amini and Howard Page of standard Oil oi New Jersey, chair- man of the negotiators for the companies. The statement said the eight firms will operate the vast Abadan refinery and .....ounding all miss. buying the oil output from Iran and selling the produc- tion abroad. IRAN KIIPI IIFINIII or Britain." lndo-China Canada had a unique position? of leadership in the English-speaking world. and he hoped theganadian POW Exchange , Begins Aug. 10 KANOI. Indo-China. (AP)-The mus sicaiaanixrof prisoners of the Indo-China war will basin Aug. 10 and average more than 1.000 men a day, a French army lpokesman announced Thursday. Exact numbers held by "till I140 was not known at I-iarioi but the spokesman said the exchange would involve more than 15.000 men. Prisoners will be exchanged at four points in North Viet Nam. There was no information avail- able about ths possible release date of Brig. Gen. Christian De Castries, commander of Dien Bien Phu when that French fort was overwhelmed by the Communist- led Vietmlnh May 7. were found Saturday in W0 M-'4' board containers on a sarbase heap near the Montreal waterfront. His torso was found Sunday, in ii room formerly occuPl'3d by Pica”- A crowd of curious spectators milled around outside the more"? and booed and hissed Picard as he was led in. manecled to a. hom- iclde detective. when one man called ”shoot him". Picard raised his free hand to cover his face. Police. fearful that ii- might try to carry out a threat on Picard'a life. checked spectators for check. "I looked around and suddenly I poulble W .3 ch" ppm mm maximum temperatures: court. D Mg" "ff airsnn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - 1 3 'lClOlilc'l 53 85 3:; :71: '"i.:1.”.”:.r.'::;i:.Sl::.: - as ' ' l r .. the spectators' section. shooting A s:,,f::Xo,, 32 33 few glances at Picard i-hmughout R!-whim 57 M the hearing. ?,,,n,p,.,z ' 53 tn . ornnlo .. 64 '19 LNUBUAI. smsu. OHM," 57 71 Edmond Mnreau, a ronmer at the lllnntroal 50 70 Lagauchellere st. rooming house Qurhtr -- 50 02 where Plcard lived. told of detect- Saint John. 52 01 log a strange odor coming from M"l','Cl"" H -- 59 "- Plcard's room late last week. Htlmll” -- 57 73 He said he investigated. bui F""'"J"”" M 99 (mind noun": Charlottetown ........ 01 70 Sunday. the odor became slmns- ?,-Vd';'1:r3"mh ' 22 Z: or and he returned for another st'l"John.l Nmfm M nffice here says there will in uniform if it were read. H. A. Newmerk of Montreal said the prayer had been approved by feeds of the Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish faiths in Montreal. He could not understand how the regulation under which the armed forces' decision was made icould be interpreted to keep serv- ice men from attending. Delegates rejected a proposal from Quebec to change t e data of Remembrance Day from Nov. 11 to some time in early summer. when better weather might be ex- pected. The convention decided to launch a song-writing competition to get a special legion song. "Under certain circumstances. I rousing song tends to promote com- radcships." the resolution said. "-v IMPORTANT ISLE ” Jamaica. with an area of 4,450 square miles. is the largest island of the British West Indies. , THE WEA'i'l-IER- 5;. -R1 Qt-11' FAVORH : N - o for: -rt-it-'. c.oi..F 0 Q4: lcnop gr , 1 TORONTO iCPl -Minimum ani HALIFAX (CP) - The weathz be IOTI Dispuieyln Iran Is Settled, realized that the small came from the vallse. I opened it and saw what wu inside and then I phoned and the refining faculties. The statement did not cite the rate of payment to Iran, but informed sources said it was virtually the same a 50-50 split that prevails else where in the Middle last. Amini and Page estimated that Iran, through direct oil revenue and taxes, would get O41),000,000 in the first three years of the ar- rangement. The estimate for the third year, more than -107,000,000. is larger than Iran's prs- st.lonall- nation oil revenue. The 26-year pact carrien a provi- sion for three five-year entensinns. standard of New Jersey, stan- dard.of Oslliornia, The Texas oo., Gulf Oil Oo.. and aocony Vacuum are the five 11.8. firms taking part in the plan. Anglo-Iranian, Royal Dutch shell. and compagnle Pren- milse De Petroles are the other ken will retain title in the fields western companies police.” Inside polioe discovered the mu- tilated torso of .V0ung- Trudeau. Henri Picard. 51. the auspectfs brother, also told nf noticing the smell Sunday morning. "He told me it was some meat he had to deliver in t.he north end. I advised him to hurry up and de- liver it as it was going bad," the witness testified. WRAPPED IN PAPII Asst.-lnsp. Henri Bond. head or the Montreal police homicide squad said the parts of the body found Saturday w-re found wrapped in a French-language newspaper from which an advertisement had been cut out. He said an advertisement faril achlnlst was found later in Ple- ard's room. it fitted the hole in the newspaper. 4 cloudy, cool weather and showers in widely scattered Maritime local- ics Friday. Regional forecasts: Lower St. John river valley: Showers in widely scattered local- ities; continuing cool: light winds. Low-high at Fredericton and saint John 55 and 07. Prince Edward Island, saoeua N. B. countiee. upper II. let: river valley: Cloudy with alowhe in widely scattered localities: eu- tinuing cool: light WIIH. law-llgl at Charlottetown 53 all 05. W- ton 55 and GI, Edvlsindstol I all 08, Camphellton SI and lit High tide today at oharlottehow at 2.40 a. m. and 1.45 p .II. summereide tide greens -3 utes later than char tetown. High tide today at the share at 10.17 a. ll. ans ILN III. sun rises today at 5.04 ai sets at 71! 15. II. it I -use gr (Tits iia.,.,aae.noegegvng-